India vs Australia | Shikhar Dhawan admits to Indiaās problems in reading conditions properly
Shikhar Dhawan has admitted that India has developed a bad habit of reading the conditions wrong in the last two games of the ongoing ODI series against Australia. After Australia pulled off a record chase in the fourth ODI, Dhawan stated that they didnāt anticipate the dew to be such a big factor.

For the second consecutive night, India had been on the wrong side of dew prediction, which came out to haunt them eventually. In Ranchi, Kohli decided to field first because of the anticipated dew that didn't eventuate and in Mohali, he batted, probably with the confidence that bowlers are good enough if the ball got wet. The two wrong anticipations have brought the idea of how theĀ Indian team are at the receiving end of something undesirable regularly, and Dhawan didnāt hesitate to admit that.
āWe had expected dew would be a factor in the last game and it didnāt come and here, we didnāt expect dew but it came very heavily,ā Dhawan said after the match on Sunday.
āBecause of the dew, the ball was not gripping and of course he (Ashton Turner) played a really good knock and took the game away from us. But he couldnāt have played those shots had there been no dew.ā
All said and done, India batted superbly in the first innings to get to a score of 358 runs and with a brittle batting line-up, it was expected that Australia would fail to go past the target. However, Ashton Turner shocked India with what can perhaps be called one of the finest ODI innings under pressure in recent times and his unbeaten 84 off 43 balls didnāt just ensure a win for the visitors, it has also kept the prospect of Australia pulling off a come-from-behind series win alive. Dhawan was all praise for the new Rajasthan Royals recruit.
āSo of course, when you put such a total on the board, thereās always pressure for the other side and not our bowlers and we were quite in control till the 38th over. But then the ball started coming so nicely and you could play any shot on that surface.
āI would give credit to him (Turner) for playing with such composure and taking the game away from us. All his shots were great, he played really well,ā Dhawan added.
One of the major reasons the game slipped from Indiaās hands is Rishabh Pant faltering on more occasions than one. On the penultimate delivery of the 39th over, Peter Handscomb had cluelessly stepped out to Kuldeep Yadav, but Pant failed to collect the rolling ball. While that was a difficult chance, theĀ 21-year-old missed another stumping chance down the legs in the 44th over, which prompted the crowd to chant āDhoni-Dhoniā at the top of their lungs. Dhawan, however, stated that it is unfair to compare Pant to Dhoni, as Pant is still young and has a long way to go.
"You can't compare Mahi

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